Eagles vs. Seahawks: NFL experts make Week 12 picks

Eagles vs. Seahawks: NFL experts make Week 12 picks

The Philadelphia Eagles and Seattle Seahawks will meet on Sunday afternoon in a huge contest for both teams. The Eagles are coming off a heartbreaking loss to the Patriots, while Seattle is fresh and looking to roll after the bye week.

Experts from around the league have weighed-in, and it looks like the field is picking the Seahawks on the road in Philly.

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ESPN — Seahawks

Tim McManus — Seahawks

NFL.com — Seahawks

CBS Sports — Seahawks

Pro Football Talk — Seahawks

Bleacher Report — Seahawks

The Athletic — Seahawks

The Inquirer — Seahawks

NJ.com — Seahawks

Seattle Seahawks’ pass rush is finally coming together

The Seattle Seahawks’ pass rush efforts got off to a slow start this season but things are improving in the second half of the year.

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The Seattle Seahawks got off to a slow start this season as far as the pass rush is concerned despite the offseason additions of Ziggy Ansah and Jadeveon Clowney.

Things changed dramatically against the 49ers in primetime, when Seattle was finally able to make an impact.

Defensive coordinator Ken Norton Jr. isn’t worried about the Seahawks production going forward.

“You just know, any time you play this game for a while, at some point, it’s going to all come together,” Norton told reporters Wednesday. “The guys have been working really hard at it. Hard work pays off. The main thing you’ve got to do is just keep on hitting it. You don’t know when it’s going to happen, but all of the sudden, it comes in bunches and they really put it together. The guys, they played well.”

Clowney, in particular, had himself an impressive outing, logging five tackles, five hits on the quarterback, a forced fumble and a defensive touchdown – earning him the NFC’s Defensive Player of the Week.

“He was disruptive,” Norton said. “You just want to see that on consistency. You don’t want to be one of those hash in the pan nights. You want to consistently effect the quarterback. Consistently make the guys around you better. Let’s bottle that up and do that every week.”

The Seahawks hit the road this weekend to face off against the Eagles and Carson Wentz – who Norton and the defense will be eyeing closely.

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Jadeveon Clowney not worried about potential contract extension

The Seattle Seahawks have yet to discuss a contract extension with star DE Jadeveon Clowney, but he’s only focused on the next game.

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Seattle Seahawks defensive end Jadeveon Clowney had without a doubt his best game of the season in Week 10 against the San Francisco 49ers, earning NFC Defensive Player of the Week honors.

His breakout game, and Seattle’s relative lack of pass rush otherwise, has lead to many speculations about his future with the squad.

Clowney is a free agent after the season, and a provision in his trade to Seattle means the team cannot franchise tag him after the year.

That means Seattle has from now until March 18 to sign Clowney to an extension, else he becomes a free agent capable of signing with any team.

However – Clowney isn’t letting his future distract him from the present.

“I’m not really worried,” Clowney told Seattle media members on Wednesday. “Right now, I’m just focusing on trying to get ready for the Eagles. It’s a lot of football left. I’m really focusing on this season. I don’t care about looking down the road. It’s just one game at a time because we can do something special here.”

Clowney came to Seattle just before the start of the season in a trade with the Texans, who acquired Barkevious Mingo, Jacob Martin and a 2020 third round pick in exchange for the 2014 first overall pick.

He’s racking up numbers in Seattle, posting 25 combined tackles, three passes defended, three forced fumbles, and two touchdowns.

Clowney admitted he has spent time in previous seasons thinking about his financial future – part of the reason he’s committed to not doing so in Seattle.

“I thought about that last year, what was going to happen with the contract,” Clowney said. “I thought about it the year before I was on my last year. I’m done thinking about that. Just take it one game at a time. One season. One play. You never know what’s going to happen. You can be one play away from the end and it all could blow up in your face. Just continue to have fun. Continue to play at a high level. Enjoy this game because it can be taken away from you at any minute. Not worried about what the future holds right now.”

Clowney and the rest of the Seahawks will keep their attention on the Eagles, who they will play in Philadelphia on Sunday morning at 10:00 a.m. PT.

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Eagles vs. Seahawks: 5 things to know about Philadelphia’s Week 12 opponent

Here are five things to know about the Seattle Seahawks, the Eagles Week 12 opponent.

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The Philadelphia Eagles will be home favorites against the surging Seattle Seahawks for their Week 12 matchup at Lincoln Financial Field. The Eagles currently sit at 5-5 on the season and are coming off a 17-10 home loss to the New England Patriots.

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With the Cowboys playing well and the NFC playoff picture starting to take shape, the Eagles need to win this game.

With the Seahawks sitting at 8-2 and a true threat in the NFC, here are five things to know about the Eagles Week 12 opponent.

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1. Carson Wentz can learn a thing or two his counterpart

Russell Wilson is at the top of the MVP race right now and he’s carried the Seattle Seahawks to the brink of a playoff berth. On the season, Wilson has gone 224 of 327, for 2,737 yards and 23 touchdowns With two interceptions. Wilson also has accounted for 256 yards and three touchdowns on the ground as well. Wentz can learn a ton from Wilson in regards to being himself and playing his style of ball. Wilson loves to get outside the pocket, he’s efficient and knows when to get rid of the football and most importantly, he puts his receivers in an excellent position to make plays.

How Seahawks’ trade for Jadeveon Clowney has panned out so far

The Seattle Seahawks sent a pair of players to Houston in exchange for Jadeveon Clowney and neither one is making huge waves for the Texans.

Much to the excitement of Seattle Seahawks fans and players, star defensive end Jadeveon Clowney finally broke out in Week 10.

He was named the Defensive Player of the Week thanks to his five tackles, five hits on the quarterback, one sack, a forced fumble and a defensive touchdown against the 49ers.

His outing was the first of, hopefully, many great performances for the Seahawks’ big offseason trade acquisition. While Clowney hasn’t been bad, it seemed everyone was waiting for the breakout to happen.

Clowney’s big game begs the question, how are things going for the members of the trade package who went to Houston?

Barkevious Mingo

The Browns selected Mingo sixth overall in 2013. He spent three years in Cleveland before two, year-long stints with the Patriots and Colts. He finally seemed to put things together in 2018 with the Seahawks, starting 14 games with 48 tackles – both career highs.

Since being dealt to the Texans, Mingo has not been a part of their defense. He’s only been on the field for eight defensive snaps through Houston’s first nine games. He didn’t factor into Sunday’s game against the Ravens either, leaving his 2019 tackle total at one.

The story for Mingo in a Texans uniform is as a member of special teams. He’s been on the field for more than 50 percent of special teams snaps each week.

Jacob Martin

Martin was taken by the Seahawks in the sixth round of the 2018 draft. He showed some worth as rookie, recording nine tackles, three sacks, and even caused a pair of fumbles.

During his first year with the Texans, Martin is having a fairly similar year. He has six tackles and forced a fumble so far in 2019, but no sacks. That includes his two-tackle day against the Ravens in Week 11.

Like Mingo, Martin also sees special teams snaps. Where Martin’s snap counts differ is that there has yet to be a game where he hasn’t seen some time on defense. He’s seen as many as 19 defensive snaps in a game.

Conclusion

The only remaining unknown of the Clowney trade deal at this point is the 2020 third-round draft selection Seattle sent to Houston. For now, the Seahawks seem to have done very well for themselves in this trade.

Clowney will look to build on his Defensive Player of the Week performance in Seattle’s Week 12 matchup against the Eagles following their bye week.

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Jadeveon Clowney’s arrival game came at the perfect time for Seahawks

Through his first nine games for the Seahawks, Jadeveon Clowney was adapting to a new system. Monday night, he unleashed hell on the 49ers.

Anyone who watches football at anything more than a cursory level will tell you that the quarterback sack is an incomplete and misleading statistic when it comes to determining the effect of a pass-rusher on a defense. While it’s nice to have a guy who can get to the quarterback, it’s even better to have a guy who provides consistent pressure at a level that can destroy the intentions of offensive coordinators on a week-to-week basis. There are also those plays in which an edge-rusher will affect an offense in ways that open things up for teammates — plays that don’t show up in the metrics at all, but make a difference on the field.

So, when we look at the season totals for Seahawks defensive end Jadeveon Clowney, there’s the traditional way, which is to say that he’s been a disappointment with just three sacks in 489 snaps. The wider view shows his 44 total pressures, when you add in his nine quarterback hits and 32 quarterback hurries. The even wider view is to posit that when the Seahawks traded for Clowney on August 31, they had to transition him from the “spinner” role he played with the Texans to a more traditional edge or LEO role that has been a staple in Pete Carroll’s defense.

“It’s just different,” Clowney said in his first press conference after the trade. “I get to get back in there going vertical, not dropping. Just really putting my head down and grinding. When you’re going forward, you don’t think about it a lot. That’s the best thing about this defense is you’ve got guys behind you that can make all plays and guys up front just getting moving and get going and cause havoc. That’s what I like about this.”

When the trade happened, I outlined what Clowney was to Houston, and what he could be to Seattle. Through the first nine weeks of Seattle’s season, Clowney had come close to a bunch of sacks; missing them by that much as he transitioned to Carroll’s ideology and the specific mechanics of his system.

“I thought he was penetrating and causing problems and making tackles,” Carroll said after the Seahawks suffered a 30-16 loss to the Ravens in Week 7. “He had a game where he had a chance to make a lot of tackles. I don’t know what his numbers wound up being, but he’s playing really hard.”

In that game, Clowney had four quarterback hurries, but no sacks, so it was a continuation of both the transition, and the frustration involved in any such transition. Tape showed that Clowney was anything but a bust, but his breakout game hadn’t yet happened.

In Seattle’s 27-24 win over the previously undefeated 49ers, it most certainly did. Coming into this game, Seattle’s defense had put up just 14 sacks, with 17 quarterback hits and 107 quarterback hurries. If any defense was “due” for an explosion of meaningful quarterback pressures, it was this one. And against San Francisco, Seattle amassed six sacks, four quarterback hits, and 14 quarterback hurries. All was once again right in Carroll’s world, in which meaningful quarterback disruption is a non-negotiable factor.

Clowney was absolutely the star of the show, with one sack, all four of Seattle’s quarterback hits, and six of the team’s 14 hurries.

“He’s been active since we started,” Carroll said after the game. “I think he understand where to take advantage of the scheme moreso now, about where we send him — we move him a lot and do a lot of things with him to try to get him in the spaces. He knows better how to use that to make the most of it. He’s an exciting football player. He can do so much stuff and sometimes, he does the wrong… he takes the wrong [gap], because he just hasn’t been with us enough. But he is maximizing moreso and that’s why I would like to think he had a big night tonight.”

No argument here, and as much as the stats tell a positive story, they don’t tell the whole story. On at least two occasions, Clowney affected 49ers quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo enough for other Seattle defenders to swoop in for their own sacks. Let’s see what the tape shows.

Jadeveon Clowney’s arrival game came at the perfect time for Seahawks

Through his first nine games for the Seahawks, Jadeveon Clowney was adapting to a new system. Monday night, he unleashed hell on the 49ers.

Anyone who watches football at anything more than a cursory level knows that the quarterback sack is an incomplete and misleading statistic when it comes to determining the effect of a pass-rusher. While it’s nice to have a guy who can get to the quarterback, it’s even better to have a guy who provides consistent pressure at a level that can destroy the intentions of offensive coordinators on a week-to-week basis. There are also those plays in which an edge-rusher will affect an offense in ways that open things up for teammates — plays that don’t show up on a stat sheet but make a difference on the field.

So, when we look at the season totals for Seahawks defensive end Jadeveon Clowney, there’s the traditional way, which is to say that he’s been a disappointment with just three sacks in 489 snaps. A wider view, after you add his nine quarterback hits and 32 quarterback hurries, shows 44 total pressures. The even wider view is to posit that when the Seahawks traded for Clowney on Aug. 31, they had to transition him from the “spinner” role he played with the Texans to a more traditional edge or LEO role that has been a staple in Pete Carroll’s defense.

“It’s just different,” Clowney said in his first press conference after the trade. “I get to get back in there going vertical, not dropping. Just really putting my head down and grinding. When you’re going forward, you don’t think about it a lot. That’s the best thing about this defense is you’ve got guys behind you that can make all plays and guys up front just getting moving and get going and cause havoc. That’s what I like about this.”

When the trade happened, I outlined what Clowney was to Houston, and what he could be to Seattle. Through the first nine weeks of Seattle’s season, Clowney had come close to a bunch of sacks; missing them by that much as he transitioned to Carroll’s ideology and the specific mechanics of his system.

“I thought he was penetrating and causing problems and making tackles,” Carroll said after the Seahawks suffered a 30-16 loss to the Ravens in Week 7. “He had a game where he had a chance to make a lot of tackles. I don’t know what his numbers wound up being, but he’s playing really hard.”

In that game, Clowney had four quarterback hurries but no sacks, so it was a continuation of both the transition and the frustration involved in any such transition. The tape showed that Clowney certainly wasn’t a bust, but his breakout game hadn’t yet happened.

In Seattle’s 27-24 win over the previously undefeated 49ers, it most certainly did. Coming into that game, Seattle’s defense had put up just 14 sacks, with 17 quarterback hits and 107 quarterback hurries. If any defense was due for an explosion of meaningful quarterback pressures, it was this one. And against San Francisco, Seattle amassed five sacks, four quarterback hits, and 14 quarterback hurries. All was once again right in Carroll’s world, in which meaningful quarterback disruption is a non-negotiable factor.

Clowney was absolutely the star of the show, with one sack, all four of Seattle’s quarterback hits, and six of the team’s 14 hurries.

“He’s been active since we started,” Carroll said after the game. “I think he understands where to take advantage of the scheme more so now, about where we send him — we move him a lot and do a lot of things with him to try to get him in the spaces. He knows better how to use that to make the most of it. He’s an exciting football player. He can do so much stuff and sometimes, he does the wrong… he takes the wrong (gap) because he just hasn’t been with us enough. But he is maximizing more so and that’s why I would like to think he had a big night tonight.”

No argument here, and as much as the stats tell a positive story, they don’t tell the whole story. On at least two occasions, Clowney affected 49ers quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo enough for other Seattle defenders to swoop in for their own sacks. Let’s see what the tape shows.

Jadeveon Clowney’s arrival game came at the perfect time for Seahawks

Jadeveon Clowney was adapting to a new system through his first nine games with Seattle. But on Monday, he unleashed hell on the 49ers.

Anyone who watches football at anything more than a cursory level knows that the quarterback sack is an incomplete and misleading statistic when it comes to determining the effect of a pass-rusher. While it’s nice to have a guy who can get to the quarterback, it’s even better to have a guy who provides consistent pressure at a level that can destroy the intentions of offensive coordinators on a week-to-week basis. There are also those plays in which an edge-rusher will affect an offense in ways that open things up for teammates — plays that don’t show up on a stat sheet but make a difference on the field.

So, when we look at the season totals for Seahawks defensive end Jadeveon Clowney, there’s the traditional way, which is to say that he’s been a disappointment with just three sacks in 489 snaps. A wider view, after you add his nine quarterback hits and 32 quarterback hurries, shows 44 total pressures. The even wider view is to posit that when the Seahawks traded for Clowney on Aug. 31, they had to transition him from the “spinner” role he played with the Texans to a more traditional edge or LEO role that has been a staple in Pete Carroll’s defense.

“It’s just different,” Clowney said in his first press conference after the trade. “I get to get back in there going vertical, not dropping. Just really putting my head down and grinding. When you’re going forward, you don’t think about it a lot. That’s the best thing about this defense is you’ve got guys behind you that can make all plays and guys up front just getting moving and get going and cause havoc. That’s what I like about this.”

When the trade happened, I outlined what Clowney was to Houston, and what he could be to Seattle. Through the first nine weeks of Seattle’s season, Clowney had come close to a bunch of sacks; missing them by that much as he transitioned to Carroll’s ideology and the specific mechanics of his system.

“I thought he was penetrating and causing problems and making tackles,” Carroll said after the Seahawks suffered a 30-16 loss to the Ravens in Week 7. “He had a game where he had a chance to make a lot of tackles. I don’t know what his numbers wound up being, but he’s playing really hard.”

In that game, Clowney had four quarterback hurries but no sacks, so it was a continuation of both the transition and the frustration involved in any such transition. The tape showed that Clowney certainly wasn’t a bust, but his breakout game hadn’t yet happened.

In Seattle’s 27-24 win over the previously undefeated 49ers, it most certainly did. Coming into that game, Seattle’s defense had put up just 14 sacks, with 17 quarterback hits and 107 quarterback hurries. If any defense was due for an explosion of meaningful quarterback pressures, it was this one. And against San Francisco, Seattle amassed five sacks, four quarterback hits, and 14 quarterback hurries. All was once again right in Carroll’s world, in which meaningful quarterback disruption is a non-negotiable factor.

Clowney was absolutely the star of the show, with one sack, all four of Seattle’s quarterback hits, and six of the team’s 14 hurries.

“He’s been active since we started,” Carroll said after the game. “I think he understands where to take advantage of the scheme more so now, about where we send him. We move him a lot and do a lot of things with him to try to get him in the spaces. He knows better how to use that to make the most of it. He’s an exciting football player. He can do so much stuff and sometimes, he does the wrong … he takes the wrong (gap), because he just hasn’t been with us enough. But he is maximizing more so, and that’s why I would like to think he had a big night tonight.”

No argument here, and as much as the stats tell a positive story, they don’t tell the whole story. On at least two occasions, Clowney affected 49ers quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo enough for other Seattle defenders to swoop in for their own sacks. Let’s see what the tape shows.

Seahawks DE Jadeveon Clowney named NFC Defensive Player of Week 10

Seattle Seahawks defensive end Jadeveon Clowney has been named the NFC’s Defensive Player of Week 10 for his play against the 49ers.

Seahawks defensive end Jadeveon Clowney was a huge part of Seattle’s win over the 49ers Monday night. Against San Francisco, Clowney logged five hits on the quarterback, a sack, a forced fumble, and a fumble recovery that resulted in a defensive touchdown.

Clowney’s performance was exactly what coaches and fans had been waiting for this season.

“It was a breakout game,” coach Pete Carroll said in his postgame press conference. “I thought he was so impressive all night long. I don’t know how, I thought they were tackling him, he was just penetrating so fast and so furiously. And what a fantastic game.”

For his efforts Monday night, Clowney has been named the NFC’s Defensive Player of the Week. This marks the second time in Clowney’s career he has earned the award, the first time being last year when he was still a member of the Texans.

It’s no surprise Clowney was also named Seahawks Wire’s Player of the Game.

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Seahawks defensive end Jadeveon Clowney shines in breakout game

Against the 49er, Seahawks defensive end Jadeveon Clowney logged five hits on the QB, a sack and a fumble recovery returned for a touchdown.

Seattle Seahawks defensive end Jadeveon Clowney finally had the breakout game everyone had been waiting for. Against the San Francisco 49ers in Week 10, Clowney finished the day with five tackles, five hits on the quarterback, a sack and a fumble recovery returned for a touchdown – his second defensive score of the year.

Clowney was all over the field Monday night and his recorded statistics don’t accurately reflect all the pressure he put on San Francisco’s offense throughout the contest.

“Golly, what a fantastic football game he played,” coach Pete Carroll said Tuesday afternoon. “He just was unblockable. He just continued to weave his way into the backfield and make plays, the run and the pass. Any plays that he wouldn’t get credit for that he affected were many and all across the board. Pass defense was good last night. Made a lot of plays, had hands on a lot of balls.”

The Seahawks had been short on sacks this season – only recording 15 heading into the Week 10 matchup. With Clowney’s assistance, Seattle was able to log five more against the 49ers as well as 10 total hits on quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo.

Clowney and his teammates have the week off to enjoy the bye before resuming practice next Monday ahead of the Eagles matchup Week 12.

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